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conducive to

/kuhn-doo-siv, -dyoo-/US // kənˈdu sɪv, -ˈdyu- //UK // (kənˈdjuːsɪv) //

有利于,有助于,利于,助于

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : tending to produce; contributive; helpful; favorable: Good eating habits are conducive to good health.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as infor
Synonyms

Examples

  • The platform’s short videos, which often feature snappy choreography to catchy music, are particularly conducive to being deepfaked to mesmerizing effect.

  • That allowed them to predict warm and dry conditions that were conducive to fire, says Harry Hendon, a meteorologist at the bureau.

  • The organization is known for having a modest budget not exactly conducive to producing slick videos like the kind featuring Grenell or a media platform with multiple contributions.

  • When the activity card was first introduced, it was more conducive to repeat site visits.

  • A prolonged period of slow growth, low inflation, low interest rates and massive policy accommodations will likely be a period that is conducive to sound performance from credit and equities.

  • That personality is not conducive to getting things done in Washington, at least not the Washington of today.

  • He was thinking big from the beginning, which is admirable but not always conducive to taut storylines.

  • So much so that it could actually be conducive to Palestinians demanding the vote en masse, with their fate at stake.

  • The school describes itself as “an educational institution conducive to an Islamic learning environment.”

  • But the statisticians cannot tell us what we most want to know: Are these trends conducive to human flourishing?

  • But the system was unsatisfactory, led to jealousies, weakened discipline, and was not conducive to efficient working.

  • It may have been that the seclusion was not a little conducive to his successful literary labors.

  • The temperance, moreover, which it compels in those who cannot eat sea provisions, is very conducive to health.

  • And the features of the agent, as he stared up from the rattling telegraph key, were not conducive to relief.

  • Poetry and music were used to a limited degree, so far as they might be made conducive to forming the traits of the soldier.